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How to Write About Your Wonderful Trips to Make Everyone Travel

A Food Fun Travel Guest Post

When you travel, you take a lot of photos. And then what? Sharing photos now requires text. The era of phrases, “Here we are at sea” or “Nice sunset,” has passed. We are going to tell how to make an interesting and informative text quickly to make everyone travel.

Come up with a text while you are waiting for the flight.

Tell readers how you feel about flying. Do you love or rather afraid of it? What are your favorite airlines? Are you earning SkyTeam or Oneworld alliance miles? Share your ways to pass the time on the plane. What do you think about special knee-highs? Admit whether you know what to do with a life jacket or whether you always ignore the instructions.

 Not all people know what to write about their flights and trips in general. Fortunately, different paper writer services provide help with such type of writing. A writer can write you a sample of text about a trip that you can use as a template while writing. 

Announce your plans in the text.

“We are going to Paris for six days, we will eat escargots and drink wine, but we will not go to the Eiffel. We saw it last time.” Love lists? Great. It is your way out! Make a ten-point to-do list: “Let’s swim naked, climb an active volcano, visit a hippie village, see whales, go to football.” For more impact on the reader, after the list, add the word “Goosebumps!”. 

And, of course, ask for advice on what to do and what to eat in the place where you are flying. And thank you for every comment.

Bars and restaurants.

Picture by ELEVATE from Pexels.com

Keep in mind that writing about bars and restaurants requires observation. When you’re at the bar, take a look around and memorize. Who is around, what do they drink, what music plays, and what is the overall atmosphere? For example, if you are writing about a bar in Barcelona, you may notice that people order sangria, and the Spaniards drink clara, vermouth, and cava.

Sea, beach, mountains, sunrises, sunsets.

Picture by Kellie Churchman from Pexels.com

In such photographs, nothing usually happens. You’re lucky if there’s a story behind the shot; for example, it can be climbing the mountains at dawn. Retell everything, what this adventure was.

If your only adventure is getting to the beach by 5:00 pm to watch the sunset, there is a way to get out. Let the sunset be the symbol of the end of the day. And in the text, retell your day. Of course, write only about the most delightful moments. For example, it can be like this, “We drank coffee, looked at the ocean, and dangled our legs. This day was remembered as a color photograph soaked in salt water.”

Plan B is to reflect on what this place teaches you. Write whatever comes to mind. You can even write something like, “Bali teaches me how to choose a good papaya from lots of papayas.”

You can write different texts about the sea. Your story can be about how you like or dislike water, how you learned to swim, or why you can’t swim. Here you can tell about your favorite swimwear, whether you like sunbathing or a beach holiday. Is it boring? The more complicated option is to write a useful post. You can write about where it is better to go sunbathing in the city, how much a sunbed costs, whether the water is warm and whether there are jellyfish.

Historical sights and museums.

Don’t start to tell the year of building the Colosseum and what people fought there. It is better to leave it to Wikipedia. Stop and think about what you know that is not on Wikipedia. For example, it does not know what flavors are walking the streets of Paris. Wikipedia doesn’t know where they sell amazing buns in Amsterdam and how to save money on bike rentals there.

Share something that you have learned from your experience. For example, if you are writing about a trip to Bali, write that if you want to take a picture near the rice fields, you risk being in beds flooded with water, and then explain how rice grows.